Heavy Metal (A Goddesses Rising Novel) (Entangled Select) (12 page)

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Authors: Natalie J. Damschroder

Tags: #goddesses, #Natalie Damschroder, #Romance, #heavy metal, #Goddesses Rising, #urban fantasy

BOOK: Heavy Metal (A Goddesses Rising Novel) (Entangled Select)
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She could blame the Society for not keeping track of her family, for assuming once the power was gone, it would never come back. But what good would that do? These women weren’t the ones who’d made that decision. They weren’t even aware of it. Riley just had to accept it for what it was.

“Where’s John?” Marley stopped at his dark office. “I thought he said he’d take us back to the apartment.”

Disgruntled and depressed, Riley resented feeling like a child who couldn’t set foot outside without adult supervision. After training today, it seemed ridiculous to have to rely on a powerless man to protect her. And in the mood she was in, she dared anyone to try anything.

“It’s only a few blocks,” she said. “We can walk it okay.” She wouldn’t plow ahead unprepared, though. She needed metal, more than the handful of nuts and bolts in her pocket. She thought of the tire iron in the training room and decided to go get it. So what if she’d look foolish carrying it? It would probably ward off more than Millinger stalkers.

“Why don’t you call John’s cell?” she suggested. “I’ll be right back.” She hurried to the end of the beige-carpeted hallway to the stairwell, clattered down one flight, and pushed through the fire door into the big room now illuminated by two security lights on the wall. She grabbed the tire iron from its spot on the shelf and ran back to Marley, who was putting her phone away.

“He and Jeannine had another meeting on the other side of the city. He’s
pissed
. He was supposed to be back here by now, but he’s stuck on the highway. Overturned fuel truck. They’re apparently turning cars around to go back to the last exit, but he figures he’s got at least an hour before he gets back here.”

Riley really didn’t want to hang around, and part of her didn’t want to see him after what she’d overheard today. “Did you tell him we’d be okay?”

“Yeah.” Marley smiled. “He didn’t like it, but he didn’t have any other solution. He said to tell you to get the tire—Yeah, that.” She laughed as Riley hefted it. “Okay, then. What do you want to eat?”

They discussed takeout options as they headed out into the waning twilight and walked toward the apartment.

“We have some chicken and pork in the freezer,” Marley mused. “Do you eat meat?” They paused at an alley to make sure the way was clear. “I have a recipe I’ve been wanting to try, for this pork chop glaze.”

Riley stopped walking. A stone had worked its way into her shoe, and she bent to slip it off and dump the stone. Marley didn’t notice and stepped out to cross the alley. An engine roared, and Riley looked down the alley to see a motorcycle zooming straight at her roommate.

She didn’t have time to think. She dropped her shoe and, with her left hand clenched hard around the tire iron, shot her other hand out. Power flooded her body and zipped through her. She realized then that the cyclist wasn’t trying to hit Marley. He drove one-handed and seemed to be reaching for the satchel draped across her body.

Riley’s surge hit him at the same time his hand curled around the strap. Marley spun, but the bike tilted when it hit the dip where alley met street. He fell sideways, and Marley shrieked and jumped back, tripping over the curb and landing hard on the sidewalk.

Tiny, hard fragments dug into her shoeless foot as Riley ran and awkwardly leapt over the cycle to land straddling the driver. He was young, his face shaved smooth, his brown hair trimmed short. He lay on his back, the shoulder of his long-sleeved shirt torn. Riley crouched and grabbed the shirt, pulling him up toward her. His eyes rolled, unfocused, as if he’d banged his helmetless head when he fell. One hand scrabbled at her fist.

“Who are you?” She brandished the tire iron, concentrating on drawing energy to boost her strength again, and shook the guy a little. All the anger at her family’s lies manifested in a raging desperation for answers. “Who are you? Who do you work for?”

“Riley.” Marley sounded confused. “He’s a mugger.”

He could be, but Riley didn’t believe it. A mugger would have hidden his face and been on foot. Who mugged people on a motorcycle?

“Who?” she demanded again, and the guy reached for his back pocket. She released him to knock his hand out of the way and pulled out his wallet, flipping it open. On the left, in the plastic window, was his driver’s license. The photo matched, but the edge of the window blocked his name. On the right, she spotted the top of a familiar-looking business card. Millinger’s logo. She didn’t recognize the name printed on it.

Marley murmured something behind her. Riley caught the words “security team” and realized she had called someone, probably John or a member of the Society board or Protectorate instead of the police.

Riley wasn’t waiting for them. She dropped the wallet and grabbed his shirt again. “Tell me what Millinger wants with us.”

“I don’t know,” the guy croaked out. He tilted his head back and looked pleadingly at Marley. She held her palm toward him, and he squirmed in panic, his heels digging into the asphalt. He twisted back to Riley. “Please, don’t magic me.”

“We don’t do magic,” she scoffed. “Just tell us.”

“They told me to swipe the bag and bring the contents to the office, that’s all.”

“What’s your job there?”

“I’m a consultant.”

“Aren’t you all.” Riley shoved him away in disgust. “Who’s your boss?”

“I don’t know. I mean, I don’t have one. I get my instructions from the owner.”

“And he is?” She stood but didn’t move away from him. “What’s his name?”

“I don’t know!” he insisted. He wiggled backward until she brandished her weapon. “Honest! I don’t even know if it’s a guy!”

“Why would you work in a job like that?” she asked.

“It pays a lot of money. But not enough for this!” He’d played her with his frightened weenie act, or just got desperate and then lucky. Either way, Riley wasn’t ready for him to lash out. His fist struck her in the side of the head. Lights flashed, and she staggered back, gasping in pain when something, probably a foot, hit her wrist and made her drop the tire iron. Seconds later, the small bike roared to life. Riley’s vision cleared in time to see the “mugger” skidding around the next corner and out of their sight.

Riley cursed loudly. Her head swam when she bent to pick up the tire iron. Only Marley’s grip on her elbow kept her from toppling over.

“Are you okay?” Marley thumbed her phone again. “You need an ambulance.”

“Don’t bother. I’m fine.” She rubbed her temple. “Who did you call?”

“John. He’s alerting the security team. I should have called the police instead,” she fretted.

“It’s fine. Don’t second guess yourself.” Riley was going to have a headache, but her vision wasn’t blurred and the lightheadedness had passed, so hopefully no concussion. “See if you can have them meet us at the apartment. I don’t think we should hang around here.”

They hurried down the street while Marley called again, John’s anger coming through to Riley even though he didn’t shout. They got safely into the apartment a few minutes later, and Riley immediately went to take a painkiller.

“You didn’t know him, did you?” she asked when she came back to the living room. Marley shook her head. Her eyes were too wide, though, and her grip on the satchel too tight, despite being locked inside now.

“You know something, though,” she encouraged. “He said something familiar to you. Was it Millinger? You know Millinger?” She wasn’t sure, but maybe they’d never said the company name in front of Marley.

Tears filled the other woman’s eyes. She dropped the satchel on the coffee table, sat on the couch, and covered her face. “It’s Anson.”

Riley pulled her sleeves down over suddenly cold hands and wrapped her arms around herself. “You think that’s who sent this guy?”

Marley shrugged a shoulder. “I don’t know, but it’s an awfully big coincidence.”

“What is?”

“He was an orphan. His mother died in childbirth, and he said his grandmother let them put him in foster care but stayed in contact with him. I’m pretty sure her last name was Millinger.”

Everything she’d been told about Anson paraded through Riley’s head. He’d gone through a lot to get power the first time. How far would he go now?

Knowledge was supposed to make things easier. Take away the fear, give you something to fight. But the more she learned, the bigger the picture became, the more she hated sitting around waiting to be targeted again.

Joining the goddess world hadn’t been all good, but she’d be damned if she let anyone take it away from her.

Riley stood and headed for the spare bedroom. “Pack a bag. We’re going to Georgia.”

“What?” Marley stopped in the doorway her eyes wide. “Now? The security team is coming!”

Riley tossed her bag onto the bed and shoved a stack of shirts into it. Over the past few months she had filed several police reports, learning quickly how little good it did. They were all overworked and had far more important things to worry about. Plus, this guy hadn’t touched them, not until Riley had knocked him off his bike and threatened him. Vern’s earlier threats echoed—a powerful person could turn this around on them. She could end up being arrested.

She grabbed a few more things from the dresser to stuff into the bag. “What’s a security team going to do?”

“Protect us.”

Riley shook her head. “All that does is give us a wall to hide behind while we wait for something else to happen. So I’m going to Atlanta.”

“Why?” Marley challenged.

“Because that’s where Millinger’s headquarters is.”

“What do you think you’re going to do there?”

“Find out what the hell he wants. Are you coming?”

“Who, Anson?” Marley dropped back a step and shook her head. “I can’t do that.”

Riley zipped the bag’s main section. “I’m tired of being a victim, Marley. My family, the Society, all these people who’ve been following me—this is my life, not theirs. I’m tired of running in the dark, and I won’t keep sitting inside some office building surrounded by protectors. I have to end this.”

Marley took a deep breath. “That sounds noble, but it’s not me. I’ve rebuilt my life after what Anson took, and I have no interest in revisiting that hell.”

Riley straightened and sighed. Marley had fought her battles already and earned her right to say no. She had to respect that. She carried her bag to the dresser to pack her toiletries in the side pocket. “I understand. It’s fine. I can go alone.”

“Is there
any
way I can stop you from charging down there? It’s dangerous.”

Riley had already done the calculations. “I’ll drive straight down and get to Millinger on Sunday. No one should be there, and all I have to do is search the office for evidence of what they’re trying to do. I promise I won’t do anything stupid.” Even if part of her wanted to confront Anson head on, she really did only need information. For now.

“You should have a protector with you, at least.”

Riley only wanted Sam. He was trained as a protector, and he had as much stake in this as she did. But what he was doing was important, too, and the sooner he was done in Mississippi, the sooner he’d be back at her side. All the better if she had something to give them a direction to look in or an action to take when he was.

“I can’t wait.” She finished stuffing the little bottles into her bag and dropped it on the bed. “I know what I’m capable of now. Protectors don’t cover goddesses in power, right?” Marley nodded reluctantly. “So I load up with metal. I have a pipe and a tire iron and some other things in the car.” But nothing she could easily wear or carry. “I can take…I don’t know, what do you have here?” She tried to think of something portable that wouldn’t call a lot of attention. They went into the kitchen and she tested the utensils, but they didn’t let her draw enough energy for what she might need. The pans were stainless steel and would be great if they weren’t so impractical.

“I’ll stop at a hardware store,” Riley decided. “Can I borrow your laptop? I need to print off directions. My car doesn’t have GPS.”

A few minutes later she paused at the door, her hand on the knob. She looked back at Marley. “Are you sure you don’t want to come with me?”

Marley bit her lip and shifted her weight from foot to foot. She glanced at the pipe and tire iron slung through the straps of Riley’s bag, then at the wall between the living room and kitchen, lined with amethyst and other crystals. Finally, she shook her head. “No. I’d be worthless. I’ll stay here and report to the security team, then see if I can learn any more about anything. Call me. And please,
please
be careful.” She hugged Riley, who hugged her back with a surge of warmth.

“Thank you,” Riley said. “For everything.”

Then she was out the door and on her way to her car in the parking garage, a little excited to have a mission. For the first time since she bounced off that big old Buick the day after her twenty-first birthday, Riley felt in control of something.

Chapter Eight

My foolishness should not have been rewarded, but my gratitude is endless. My debt will remain unpaid for the remainder of my life, but to become whole again, to embrace that which I lost through my own shortsightedness, has been the greatest joy of my life.

—Meandress Chronicles,
compilation of family diaries

Sam spent his time on the plane and his layover in Chicago trying to nail down something, anything, on Millinger or Anson Tournado, but still came up agonizingly empty. He’d reactivated some old, not-entirely-legal methods of searching but still nothing. No financial records or leases or utilities in Anson’s name, which might mean he was operating on a cash basis since getting out of jail, but could also mean he was using aliases or fronts to hide his activities should anyone go looking.

Vern Nurnan and Sharla Cannalunis turned up a little more, but none of it was helpful. Both had small-time criminal records, had bounced from job to job, and used their credit and debit cards for meaningless purchases. He couldn’t find an employment record for Millinger, despite the business cards, but they had said
consultant
, so they probably weren’t on any official payroll.

He’d texted Riley a couple of times and talked to her once. She’d sounded distracted and ended the call quickly, leaving him to wonder how upset she was, after all, that he’d left her. It made him more determined to get this done quickly and get back.

Once he’d landed in Jackson, Mississippi, and driven to the hotel where he was meeting Nick and Quinn, it was late, and he was exhausted and cranky after being folded into an economy seat for too many hours. He texted Nick his room number and got a response that they were still en route and would see him in the morning. It was too late to try to call Riley, but he fell asleep thinking of how he could make it up to her, and tested a few of those in his dreams.

He woke to Nick pounding on the motel room door at what seemed like only a couple of hours after he’d fallen asleep. He groggily dragged on jeans and manipulated the locks to let him in.

“What are you doing here so early?” he griped.

Nick looked way too chipper after driving twelve hours, but he was probably thrilled to be back on the road. He’d been stuck in one place for three years after fifteen as a protector, moving from one goddess assignment to the next.

He closed the door behind him and leaned against the wall. “Dude, it’s almost noon. We’ve been waiting for you to drag your lazy ass out of bed and call us. You missed breakfast.”

Sam rubbed his eyes and headed for the bathroom. “I’ll be out in a minute.” He left Nick sighing in mock annoyance and picking up the remote for the TV bolted to the wall.

Sam brushed his teeth and took a fast-and-dirty shower that managed to give him a measure of alertness. But he’d been so groggy he hadn’t grabbed clean clothes. He wrapped in a threadbare towel and went back out into the room.

Nick was sitting on the end of the bed, boots planted flat on the floor in front of him. “So?”

“So, what?” Sam pulled clothes out of his duffel bag and started getting dressed.

“So, who’s the chick?”

Sam narrowed his eyes at him for a second before yanking a Henley over his head. “What are you talking about?”

Nick flipped off the TV. “The reason you put me off the other day and are in such a hurry to get back to Boston.”

“It’s about a lot more than just a chick.”

“Yeah, I talked to John.” He stood and went to the chipboard dresser, flipping a few pages in the info book while he re-rolled the sleeve of the flannel shirt he wore over a T-shirt. “Believe me, I’m as eager to wipe Tournado off the face of the earth as you are. But you’ve got squat to go on, right?”

Sam grunted and sat to put on his socks and boots.

“So the only reason you’d be in a hurry to get back there must be this new goddess you’ve discovered.”

“I didn’t discover her.” He didn’t know why he was reluctant to tell Nick about Riley, except that he wasn’t in the mood for brotherly ribbing or Nick’s brand of smugness when he thought he knew it all, which was almost always. “She’s vulnerable and a potential target of Anson’s.”

“And hot?” Nick waggled his eyebrows, and Sam couldn’t help laughing.

“Yeah. But that’s not why I like her,” he defended. But when Nick hooked one finger into the side of the curtain and peeked out into the parking lot, and then scrubbed a hand in his shorter-than-usual spiky blond hair, Sam began to suspect there was something Nick wasn’t saying. He wasn’t normally this antsy.

“What’s going on? Why were you in such an all-fired hurry to get me down here so quickly?”

Nick shot him a sideways look. “I told you. Quinn’s sick. She’s hurting.”

And Nick would never let that go on a second longer than necessary, Sam knew. “But there’s something more than that.” He thought about conversations he’d had with both of them over the last few months. “You’re not very happy, are you?”

Nick’s expression closed up, his eyes darkening. He’d hit a nerve. Sam knew Nick would die before ever admitting it to Quinn. But he also knew Nick. He waited him out, and after Nick tested the durability of the bar lock on the door and kicked the platform under the bed, he finally caved.

“I’m going crazy, man,” he admitted. “I’m so freakin’ bored, I catch myself hoping someone will attack her.”

Sam laughed. “That would be entertainment, not action.”

“Tell me about it. The woman needs
nothing
. She can flick her finger and knock a bad guy into next week. Her stamina is incredible, and she even pulls beer faster than anyone in the bar.” He shook his head sadly. “I am definitely not needed.”

Sam smirked. “Feeling a little inadequate?”

Nick jerked forward and poked his finger at Sam. “No. She doesn’t need me for
that
stuff. She still needs me for—you know—other stuff.”

Sam sobered. “So, tired of feeling unnecessary. Is that a deal breaker?”

“What do you mean, deal breaker?” Nick stared at him for a second. “You mean, am I done with Quinn?” His eyes blazed with a combination of love and torment. “Hell, no. I want to get married.”

Sam was too startled to have anything but a genuine reaction, and that was to grin and start heading over to give Nick a congratulatory man-hug. But Nick warded him off with upraised hands.

“Don’t congratulate me too soon. Quinn’s balking until we get this transfer thing done. I think she’s afraid I’ll change my mind afterward, or that something will happen to her and she doesn’t want to tie me or something.” He threw up his hands and paced as much as the confined area would let him. “I don’t know. We both avoided communicating for so many years, I’m not sure we have the skills.”

Sam would have snickered at the macho protector talking about communication skills if the implication that Quinn might die hadn’t struck him so hard.

“It’s that serious?” he asked in a low voice.

Nick settled against the cinderblock wall and folded his arms. “Yeah, I’m afraid it is. And it happened fast. For all this time, she’s handled the power fine. Most people would have gone overboard with it. Quinn’s kept it low-key, not compromising her ethics or getting greedy. And she has complete control over using it.”

There was an obvious
but
coming. Sam quirked an eyebrow.

Nick sighed. “The moon lust is gone, which hasn’t been a bad thing, believe me. She’s happy to have it all happen naturally. So she gets tired faster but recharges faster, with a short rest, and she hasn’t needed to wait for full moon to have peak power.”

“Has any of that changed?”

Nick shook his head. “It’s just taken a toll. I thought at first it was guilt and sympathy for her friends, but it’s deeper than that. She has nightmares. She said a couple of times she feels like something’s pulling at her, almost like the power is trying to get back to its original owners, and that’s gotten stronger.”

Sam didn’t like the images that evoked. “That’s kind of weird, Nick.”

“Of course it is, but hell, Sam, it’s magic. As scientific as we try to get with it, we don’t really understand how it works in anything more than a basic sense. All I know is that it’s doing her harm.” He took a deep breath. “Tanda and Chloe live on opposite coasts,” he reminded him.

Horror dawned as Sam understood what Nick meant. “It’s ripping her apart?”

“Maybe.” He paced again. “I don’t know. And I don’t know if she can transfer it, or if transferring it will make a difference. She could end up worse.”

He glanced at Sam, then away. “Come on. Quinn’s waiting. We might as well have the rest of this conversation together.”

Sam followed him with a much greater sense of foreboding than he’d had when he left Boston.


Nick and Quinn had gotten a much nicer room than Sam had, in a newer section of the hotel. He’d been so tired the night before he hadn’t even noticed there was a difference. He accepted a hug and a cup of coffee from Quinn, and the three of them settled in the comfortable sitting area to talk.

Quinn looked a little better than Sam had expected. Thinner than when he’d seen her last, and brittle in a way he’d never have described her or thought would even be possible. Her dark hair was shorter and had less body. But her color was good, and her eyes bright. Still, Nick hovered as if he thought she’d keel over, and Sam was surprised he’d left the room long enough to come get Sam.

“So tell me how this works,” he said. “How is it different from the way Marley gave power to Anson?”

Quinn folded her legs, engulfed in loose yoga pants, up onto the love seat and leaned against Nick, cradling her coffee in both hands. “He’d never had any power to begin with. We know he was able to receive it because he’s the son of a goddess, so there’s a genetic factor there, and he wasn’t altered before the power was bestowed. Tanda and Chloe had the ability, and it was ripped out of them.” She sipped her coffee. “I tried to give Marley’s back right after we caught Anson, and I couldn’t. She was broken and couldn’t accept it. I thought it was because of the way things had happened, but when I tried again with Chloe, it still didn’t work. It’s not a simple matter of reverse siphoning. I figured I have to fix the vessel before it can accept the power. That’s not the hard part.”

“The hard part is that the power of four goddesses is mixed together in you,” Sam guessed.

“Right. Because it’s all comingled, I need a secondary conduit to filter it through. Separate it. It has to be someone we can trust, but it can’t be a goddess. Someone with no power, but who is blood relative to a goddess. That rules out a lot of people. It basically means—”

“The son of a goddess.” Now he knew why they needed him in particular. He was the only one with the full combination of prerequisites.

He studied them, déjà vu hitting him despite the change in venue. Three years ago, they’d pow-wowed in Quinn’s bar about a major threat and how to stop it. “This conversation sounds familiar.”

Quinn took a shaky breath. “Yeah, it does. It’s the same conditions that create a leech.”

Fuck
was pretty much the only response to that, so he let it go for now and asked, “How did you figure out how to do the transfers?”

Nick threw his feet up onto the coffee table and crossed his ankles. “We’ve been doing research since it happened. Some goddesses have family diaries and records of their entire ancestry. We just had to find the right one.”

Quinn shoved Nick’s feet down and rested her hand on a large, old book on the table. Its leather binding was worn at the edges, the black faded to a dirty gray. “It’s happened at least once before, around a hundred years ago, and they were able to transfer the power back. Only one goddess got leeched, though. She gave some power to the man she worked for, and he leeched the rest from her. So that’s different, obviously.”

“How did she get it back?”

“Her mother retrieved the power from the leech. I don’t know how she knew how. Maybe legends or stories told through the generations or something. Maybe she just tried, or guessed.” She lifted the book and opened it to a bookmarked page. “Then she used her son, the leeched goddess’s brother, as a conduit to filter his sister’s power out of her own. He ended up with some residual power, enough to do what Nick calls magic tricks.” She smiled at her fiancé with fondness and exasperation. He grinned unrepentantly. “It worked, and the goddess says here that she felt whole again.”

“What does she say about her brother?”

Quinn closed the book and set it back down, looking troubled. “After he used the little bit of residual power, he’s described as being ‘taken with a sickness of the heart.’ We don’t know what that means or how long it lasted. I was able to find his death certificate, and he was eighty-three when he died in his sleep.”

Sam thought about that. Sickness of the heart could mean anything. Love was the first thing that came to mind, but that could be him projecting. Lust was the next. He’d never talked to another goddess who had the moon lust Quinn used to suffer, the driving need for sex to help her recharge when she’d overused her power. That didn’t mean they didn’t have it. It was the kind of thing they’d keep private. A sister probably wouldn’t know if her brother was whacking off all the time, just that he was being secretive and spending a lot of time alone. So it could be something like that.

“Maybe he didn’t want the power,” Quinn offered with a hint of anxiety when Sam didn’t say anything. “Or he didn’t know how to handle it, or was resistant to change or something.”

Or maybe it was like an addiction. If he’d had a need to replenish it but didn’t fulfill that need, Sam imagined the result could be something like a sickness of the heart.

What would happen when they did this three times? Jennifer, Chloe, and Tanda all had similar but different power sources—flowing water like the Mississippi River, the ocean, and rain. If each left a residue in him, how much ability would come with it? And what would happen if he used it? He didn’t want to become like Anson.

Not that he was worried he’d suddenly become a monster. Anson had planned everything, sought the power Marley gave him with the intention of stealing more. Reports on him after Quinn took it back indicated he’d been his normal, charming—and asshole—self.

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